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by TheRealDunkirk
3459 days ago
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I consider myself a first-rate Linux sysadmin, and a perfectly competent Windows sysadmin as well, but this is a position I can't wrap my head around. If you're willing to pay thousands of dollars for a properly-licensed SQL Server install, why do you care if it needs to run on Windows? I would normally assume you don't want the license cost of the OS, but it's a tiny fraction of the overall licensing cost. The only thing I see MSSQL on Linux being useful for is for development and testing purposes before deployment to a local server farm or the Azure cloud. (Even then, why not just run it on your Windows dev machine?) Honest question: What's the scenario where you'd license a system to run on Linux in production? To me, this is interesting, from the virtualization standpoint, but it seems like a solution in search of a problem. |
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And even in companies that have Windows MSSQL on Linux might be useful, e.g. if they have a linux-centric virtualization infrastructure.